Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Twitter index trims search time

- CAITLIN DEWEY

Until Tuesday afternoon, when Twitter announced it was soon releasing its first complete index, digging up old tweets was a surprising­ly difficult task. Twitter’s infamously glitchy search function could only go back so far in time. Google only indexes a small percentage of all tweets, and is biased in favor of top-tier accounts.

So if you wanted to find, say, those profane, insulting and otherwise unsavory tweets that basketball’s Kevin Durant sent circa 2009, you had two options: navigate to Durant’s timeline, put a weight on your keyboard’s “down” arrow and hope to reach the bottom within your lifetime; or shell out thousands of dollars for an analytics service like Topsy. You couldn’t jump to a particular month or year in a user’s timeline, as you can on Facebook. And you certainly couldn’t search a user’s corpus of tweets.

In other words, even Durant’s more offensive missives were pretty darn safe. Until now.

Twitter’s new search infrastruc­ture will allow anyone to search every tweet ever published publicly. That might not seem like a terribly profound deal, given that this informatio­n was technicall­y out in the open already. But as anyone who has ever searched for an old tweet knows very well, “out in the open” is a relative term. A tweet from 2006 may technicall­y be accessible, but it’s buried under eight years of digital sediment — thousands, maybe tens of thousands, of later tweets, each appearing reverse-chronologi­cally, fossilizin­g the oldest tweets further, linking none of them to search results.

In fact, you can think of Twitter’s incomplete index as a corollary to the whole rightto-be-forgotten debate: In both cases, the material is still online, but since it’s not tied to a search index, it may as well not exist.

Twitter is rolling the index out by degrees. While the underlying infrastruc­ture went live on Tuesday, a post on the platform’s blog says it’ll continue tweaking how search results are displayed and rolling out “new product experience­s,” whatever that means.

In either case, you have a little time to ponder the ancient tweets you’d most like to uncover. Or to clean up your digital footprint. You decide.

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